A Snapshot of Haryana's Dynamics in The Mughal Period

Authors

  • Mamta Rani  Research Scholar, Department of History, Madhav University, Rajasthan, India
  • Dr. Altaf Khan  Research Supervisor, Department of History, Madhav University, Rajasthan, India

DOI:

https://doi.org//10.32628/IJSRST1962353

Keywords:

Haruyana, Mugal Period, Economic Condition

Abstract

Haryana has been a focus of attention throughout history, including the ancient, medieval, and modern periods. Because of its location in the north, it remained strategically important. During the Sultanate and Mughal periods, the Haryana district was extremely important in terms of trade and resistance. In ancient times, the Mahabharata was fought at Kurukshetra, and three skirmishes at Panipat, which completely transformed India's fortunes, were fought in Haryana. This study intends to contribute to the socioeconomic and unique situations of the Haryana region during the Mughal period in an objective and scientific manner (1707-1857). This period of Mughal history was chosen for research because it was a time of great change, replete with perplexity, curiosity, and upheaval. This time, the sunset represented the rise and collapse of the Sikhs', Marathas', and Jats' powers, as well as the rise and power of the theory British. It is concerning that the region's historical realities, socioeconomic, and religious problems are not fully recognized, despite attempts in both cases. This revelation was necessary in order to showcase a larger network of regional opportunities and to portray the genuine image of the time. The analysis attempts to close this gap in this way. It will also respond to the ever-changing demand, as well as the necessity to rewrite and recompose the regional history in light of the wide range of expertise and education now accessible.

References

  1. Agnew R. (1992) foundation for a general strain theary of crime and delinquency criminology.
  2. Arneklev B. J. Grasmick H. G. Tittle C. R. – 8 Bursik R. J. (1993) law self-control and imprudent behavior journal of quantitative criminology. 225,247
  3. Burton V. S. oullen F. T. Evans. T. D. Alarid L.F. & Dunaway R. G. (1998) Gender self-control and crime journal of research in crime and delinquency. 05,123,147
  4. Guenther C. L. and M.D. Alicke-2013 psychology of he self in oxford bibliographies in psychology new York oxford university press.
  5. james W. 1890 the consciousness of self in the principles of psychology vol.1 by w. james. 291-401 new York Henry Hots.
  6. Leary M.R. and J. P. Tangney, eds. 2012 Handbook of self and identity 2nd new York Guilford.
  7. Asiely D. and K. wertenbroch 2002. procrastination deadlines and performance self-control by recommitment psychological science 13.3 219-224.
  8. Aspinarall L. G. and S. E. Taylor. 1997. Astiten in time self-regulation and proactive coping psychological bulletin 121.3. 417-436.
  9. Amir N. C. Beard M. Buens and J. Bomyea 2009 Attention modification program in individuals with generalized anxiety disorder. Journal of abnormal psychology 118.1 28-33.
  10. Fujit K. Y. Trope N. Liberman and Levin sagi 2006. construal levels and self-control journal of personality and social psychology 90.3 351-367.

Downloads

Published

2019-02-25

Issue

Section

Research Articles

How to Cite

[1]
Mamta Rani, Dr. Altaf Khan, " A Snapshot of Haryana's Dynamics in The Mughal Period, International Journal of Scientific Research in Science and Technology(IJSRST), Online ISSN : 2395-602X, Print ISSN : 2395-6011, Volume 6, Issue 1, pp.636-641, January-February-2019. Available at doi : https://doi.org/10.32628/IJSRST1962353